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The driving factors of new particle formation and growth in the polluted boundary layer

Authors :
Xiao, Mao
Hoyle, Christopher R.
Dada, Lubna
Stolzenburg, Dominik
Kürten, Andreas
Wang, Mingyi
Lamkaddam, Houssni
Garmash, Olga
Mentler, Bernhard
Molteni, Ugo
Baccarini, Andrea
Simon, Mario
He, Xu-Cheng
Lehtipalo, Katrianne
Ahonen, Lauri R.
Baalbaki, Rima
Bauer, Paulus S.
Beck, Lisa
Bell, David
Bianchi, Federico
Brilke, Sophia
Chen, Dexian
Chiu, Randall
Dias, António
Duplissy, Jonathan
Finkenzeller, Henning
Gordon, Hamish
Hofbauer, Victoria
Kim, Changhyuk
Koenig, Theodore K.
Lampilahti, Janne
Lee, Chuan Ping
Li, Zijun
Mai, Huajun
Makhmutov, Vladimir
Manninen, Hanna E.
Marten, Ruby
Mathot, Serge
Mauldin, Roy L.
Nie, Wei
Onnela, Antti
Partoll, Eva
Petäjä, Tuukka
Pfeifer, Joschka
Pospisilova, Veronika
Quéléver, Lauriane L.J.
Rissanen, Matti P.
Schobesberger, Siegfried
Schuchmann, Simone
Stozhkov, Yuri
Tauber, Christian
Tham, Yee Jun
Tomé, António
Vazquez-Pufleau, Miguel
Wagner, Andrea C.
Wagner, Robert
Wang, Yonghong
Weitz, Lena
Wimmer, Daniela
Wu, Yusheng
Yan, Chao
Ye, Penglin
Ye, Qing
Zha, Qiaozhi
Zhou, Xueqin
Amorim, Antonio
Carslaw, Ken
Curtius, Joachim
Hansel, Armin
Volkamer, Rainer
Winkler, Paul M.
Flagan, Richard C.
Kulmala, Markku
Worsnop, Douglas R.
Kirkby, Jasper
Donahue, Neil M.
Baltensperger, Urs
El Haddad, Imad
Dommen, Josef
Publisher :
ETH Zurich

Abstract

New particle formation (NPF) is a significant source of atmospheric particles, affecting climate and air quality. Understanding the mechanisms involved in urban aerosols is important to develop effective mitigation strategies. However, NPF rates reported in the polluted boundary layer span more than 4 orders of magnitude, and the reasons behind this variability are the subject of intense scientific debate. Multiple atmospheric vapours have been postulated to participate in NPF, including sulfuric acid, ammonia, amines and organics, but their relative roles remain unclear. We investigated NPF in the CLOUD chamber using mixtures of anthropogenic vapours that simulate polluted boundary layer conditions. We demonstrate that NPF in polluted environments is largely driven by the formation of sulfuric acid-base clusters, stabilized by the presence of amines, high ammonia concentrations and lower temperatures. Aromatic oxidation products, despite their extremely low volatility, play a minor role in NPF in the chosen urban environment but can be important for particle growth and hence for the survival of newly formed particles. Our measurements quantitatively account for NPF in highly diverse urban environments and explain its large observed variability. Such quantitative information obtained under controlled laboratory conditions will help the interpretation of future ambient observations of NPF rates in polluted atmospheres.<br />Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 21 (18)<br />ISSN:1680-7375<br />ISSN:1680-7367

Subjects

Subjects :
13. Climate action

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807375 and 16807367
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........56870ca7c10e9bc33befb69ee21c6a3a